In and around Gadsden, many herbicide exposures are tied to routine land care and jobsite conditions—especially when products are applied outdoors and residue can follow people home on clothing, tools, or work gear.
Common scenarios we see include:
- Residential yard and garden use (mixing concentrates, mowing treated areas, or handling hoses/sprayers after application)
- Landscaping and grounds work for schools, churches, municipalities, and commercial properties
- Outdoor maintenance near roadways and public rights-of-way where spraying or vegetation control may occur
- Secondhand exposure when a spouse or family member works with treated areas and brings residue into the home
- Agricultural or forestry-adjacent work in surrounding areas where vegetation management is a regular part of the job
These are not “just chemical exposure” situations. The legal questions usually turn on when and how exposure happened, how the product was used, and whether the timing lines up with medical findings.


